How America’s Plan Works

America’s Plan isn’t just a website. It’s an integrated ecosystem where communities organize, solve problems together, and share solutions that scale.

Here’s how it works:


🏛️ The WordPress Site — Your Commons Library

The WordPress site is America’s Plan’s public-facing commons — a living library of knowledge, tools, and proven solutions that anyone can access, use, adapt, and improve.

What you’ll find:

  • Guides & Playbooks — Step-by-step frameworks for starting a pod, organizing campaigns, using AI tools safely, talking to media
  • Success Stories — Real case studies from communities: what worked, what didn’t, lessons learned
  • Campaign Templates — Ready-to-adapt playbooks for Media Reform, Healthcare Access, Tax Justice, and more
  • Open Data & Research — Raw datasets, analysis, and research findings — all in formats you can use and remix
  • Decision Logs & Transparency — See how decisions are made, where money goes, who’s involved
  • The Digital Commons Charter — Our promise: what we build here, stays with the people who built it

Everything here is licensed under Creative Commons (CC BY-SA 4.0) — which means you can use it, change it, and share it, as long as you give credit and keep it open.


💬 The Community Forum — Where Change Happens

The forum is where communities gather, learn from each other, and co-create solutions in real time.

It’s organized by issue — Media Reform, Healthcare Access, Tax Justice, and more. Each issue space has its own channels where:

  • Issue Facilitators welcome new people and guide conversations
  • Community members share lived experience — what they’re seeing on the ground
  • People ask questions and learn from each other
  • Subject matter experts are invited in as advisors (not decision-makers) when needed
  • The group works through a process: understand the problem → map what’s causing it → explore solutions → choose next steps

What happens in the forum:

  • Deep-dive discussions on specific problems and strategies
  • Q&A sessions with experts, facilitators, and other organizers
  • Resource sharing — research, articles, tools, lessons learned
  • Cross-pod learning — communities see what other pods are doing and adapt their approaches
  • Collaborative drafting — co-write campaign plans, policy briefs, guides together
  • Crowdsourced research — collect data, stories, and evidence as a community
  • Peer mentoring — experienced organizers help newer people
  • Mistakes & lessons — communities openly share what didn’t work, so others learn faster

🌱 Issue Pods — The Engine of Change

Issue Pods are decentralized, self-organized groups focused on a specific policy issue.

How they work:

  • Anyone can start a pod — no permission needed
  • Pods choose their own goals, strategies, and timelines
  • Pods can be local, national, or issue-specific (e.g., “Rural Media Reform Pod”)
  • Issue Facilitators guide the work — they don’t dictate
  • Decisions are made by consensus or majority vote within the pod
  • Experts are invited in as advisors — not decision-makers

What pods do:

  • Organize communities around shared issues
  • Develop and test solutions locally
  • Document their work — what they tried, what worked, what didn’t
  • Turn their solutions into guides, templates, or playbooks for the commons
  • Share lessons so others can learn, adapt, and improve

🔁 The Feedback Loop — How the Commons Grows

This is where the magic happens. Every solution flows through a cycle that makes it stronger, more useful, and more scalable.

The cycle:

  1. Community Organizes → In the forum, people gather around an issue, share stories, ask questions
  2. Solution Co-Created → Through discussion, research, and collaboration, they draft a solution
  3. Solution Tested → They implement it locally, track results, document what worked
  4. Solution Documented → They turn it into a guide, playbook, or template
  5. Solution Published → It’s posted on the WordPress site, tagged, and linked to the forum
  6. Solution Reused → Other communities find it, adapt it, improve it
  7. Improvement Shared → They post their changes back to the forum, update the guide
  8. Cycle Repeats → The commons grows richer, more robust, more useful

Real-world example:

15 people in the forum start talking about local news deserts. They draft a plan to launch a community news cooperative. They pilot it in one town and get 500 subscribers in 3 months. They write “How to Launch a Community News Cooperative” — with budget, outreach plan, legal tips. It’s published on the WordPress site. Three other pods adapt it — one adds a fundraising section, one adds a social media strategy. They post their changes back to the forum. The playbook becomes the go-to resource for media reform nationwide.

One pod’s success becomes a blueprint for many.

WordPress + Forum + Pods = The Commons Engine

WordPress SiteCommunity ForumHow They Connect
Library — static, curated, reusable knowledgeWorkshop — dynamic, collaborative, evolving knowledgeForum discussions → become WordPress guides → inspire new forum discussions
Public face — for outsiders, media, alliesInternal space — for organizers, facilitators, volunteersForum members use WordPress to learn → WordPress users join forum to collaborate
Governance — policies, charter, rolesPractice — how policies are lived, tested, improvedForum feedback → shapes WordPress policies → policies guide forum behavior
Data & research — open datasets, analysisData collection — communities gather data, share findingsForum data → becomes WordPress datasets → datasets inform forum strategy

🧑‍🤝‍🧑 The Role of Volunteers

Volunteers are the glue that holds the ecosystem together:

  • Issue Facilitators — Bridge forum and WordPress. Turn discussions into published guides.
  • AI Tools & Training Lead — Help pods use AI to research, draft, summarize — then turn those methods into reusable WordPress guides.
  • Social Media & Training Lead — Help pods promote their work — then turn those strategies into templates others can adapt.
  • Security & Privacy Advisor — Help pods stay safe — then turn those practices into WordPress guides.
  • Communications Lead — Help pods tell their stories — then turn those stories into case studies for the commons.

🌍 Why This Works

1. Power is Distributed

No one person or group controls the platform. Power flows from the communities using it — not down from leadership.

2. Knowledge is Shared

What one community learns becomes a resource for all. No reinventing the wheel — just building on what’s already been tested.

3. Solutions are Scalable

Every pod’s success becomes a blueprint for others. One local win can become a national movement.

4. Democracy is Practiced

By co-creating, sharing openly, and governing together — we prove that ordinary people can solve extraordinary problems.


🚀 Ready to Build?

This isn’t theory. It’s a system designed to replicate.
One pod’s success becomes a playbook for 100.

Start where you are. Build what you need. Share what you learn.

👉 Start a Pod
👉 Join the Media Reform Pod
👉 Volunteer


America’s Plan is more than a platform — it’s a machine for democratic innovation, powered by the people who live the issues.
You’re not waiting for permission. You’re not waiting for a leader.
You’re building the future — one pod at a time.
And you’re not alone.

This article was researched and drafted with AI assistance and edited, directed, and verified by the author.